I should point out that I'm not trying to convert anyone, just stating what the reality of the situation is (at least as I see it). I'd have thought it was axiomatic that the first couple of years would not be the most important in a journey of hundreds of years, but perhaps the way we are wired these days we do indeed think only of our own short term needs? Among the debate I imagine going back to the fields of Bannockburn, Culloden, Flodden, and explaining to the men that actually we'll have a chance for independence in the future, and all we have to do is turn up and make a scratch on a piece of paper. But we're scared what picture is going to be on our currency the next day. If they didn't die laughing, they'd surely kill us?
Equally I'd have thought that the drive to leave a better world for the next generation should, by common-sense, be at least one uniting argument - who can disagree with that? The climate change one I won't touch, but a clear argument is our financial ponzu scheme. We're more than happy to build up ever more massive mountains of debt to pay for our today, the entirety of which will have to be serviced (and supposedly repaid) by our grandchildren - on top of making their own way in the world. Indeed independence offers Scotland a once in a lifetime, indeed a once in history, chance to create a currency which is actually backed by the government and the people (as opposed to all other national currencies which are principally created when commercial banks make loans).
It is a stunning, once in a lifetime, once in history opportunity to throw off so much of what is wrong with finance, society, inequality, and build something better. I'm incredulous if we cannot improve upon the vast swathe of things that are wrong today. Truly if our worry is "can we still use the pound" and we act accordingly with that I am genuinely disappointed - if that's the scale of our ambitions and ideas, perhaps our worth is only to be ruled from afar.